Ehren Jordan Wine Cellars v. Bello CA1/2 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 9/19/22 Ehren Jordan Wine Cellars v. Bello CA1/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
    ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    EHREN JORDAN WINE CELLARS,
    LLC,
    A163720
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                                     (Napa County Super. Ct.
    No. 19CV000681)
    MICHAEL RU BELLO,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Defendant Michael Ru Bello was the sole shareholder, sole director,
    and president of Walldesign, Inc. (Walldesign). Bello issued checks from a
    Walldesign account to pay for personal expenses, including services provided
    by plaintiff Ehren Jordan Wine Cellars, LLC (Ehren) to Bello for his family
    winery. After Walldesign filed for bankruptcy, the Official Committee of
    Unsecured Creditors (Committee) commenced an adversary proceeding
    against Ehren to recover those payments as fraudulent transfers. The
    bankruptcy court entered judgment against Ehren for $320,482.96.
    Ehren then sued Bello in state court asserting causes of action for
    intentional misrepresentation, concealment, and unjust enrichment. Bello
    filed a motion in limine to dismiss the action, arguing that the bankruptcy
    court had original and exclusive jurisdiction of such disputes. The trial court
    denied the motion. The matter proceeded to trial, where the jury found in
    favor of Ehren on its three claims and awarded Ehren $320,482 in damages.
    Bello now appeals the denial of his motion in limine and the
    subsequent judgment against him, arguing that the trial court lacked subject
    matter jurisdiction to hear the case. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    A. The Parties
    Bello served as the sole shareholder, director, and president of
    Walldesign, a California corporation that installed drywall, acoustical
    material, and plaster for construction projects. Walldesign maintained a
    primary bank account at Comerica Bank. In 2002, Bello opened a different
    account in Walldesign’s name at Preferred Bank. This secondary account
    was funded with rebates and refunds Walldesign received from suppliers for
    unused products or materials. Bello apparently directed these suppliers to
    issue checks for rebates and refunds (instead of deducting the difference from
    Walldesign’s invoices), and then deposited the checks into the secondary
    account.
    Bello used the funds in this secondary Walldesign account to pay for
    various personal expenses, including expenses related to his family winery,
    horseracing stable, casino bills, and credit card charges. Bello paid nearly
    $8 million to roughly 130 individuals or entities from this account. (In re
    Walldesign, Inc. (2017) 
    872 F.3d 954
    , 960 (Walldesign, Inc.).) Ehren was one
    such entity. From 2007 to 2010, Bello issued checks totaling $212,114.05 to
    2
    Ehren1 for wine production services related to Bello’s family winery. Each of
    these checks bore the name “WALLDESIGN INCORPORATED.”
    B. Bankruptcy Proceedings
    Walldesign experienced significant financial decline over the next
    several years and in 2012, Walldesign filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition.
    The Committee subsequently brought 96 separate adversary proceedings to
    recover payments Bello made from the secondary Walldesign account as
    fraudulent transfers subject to turnover pursuant to title 11 of the United
    States Code2 sections 544(b) and 550(a).3 (Walldesign, Inc., supra, 872 F.3d
    at p. 960.) In 2013, the Committee filed an adversary proceeding against
    Ehren.4 In 2016, the bankruptcy court entered judgment against Ehren for
    $320,482.96 ($212,114.05 principal and $108,368.91 prejudgment interest)
    plus any postjudgment interest.
    1 These checks were made payable to Ehren, as well as its fictitious
    business name “Faila” and its winemaker David Ehren Jordan. We refer to
    these collectively as “Ehren” in our recitation of the bankruptcy proceedings.
    2Further undesignated section references are to title 11 of the United
    States Code.
    3  Section 544(b) provides that a bankruptcy trustee “may avoid any
    transfer of an interest of the debtor in property or any obligation incurred by
    the debtor that is voidable under applicable law by a creditor holding an
    unsecured claim that is allowable under section 502 of this title or that is not
    allowable only under section 502(e) of this title.” Section 550(a) provides, in
    relevant part, that the trustee may recover transferred property from the
    “initial transferee” to the extent a transfer is avoided under section 544.
    4 The trustee of the liquidation trust established by Walldesign’s
    confirmed Chapter 11 plan subsequently succeeded the Committee as the
    real party in interest.
    3
    C. Ehren’s State Court Action
    In 2019, Ehren filed a complaint in Napa County Superior Court
    against Bello5 that included causes of action for (1) intentional
    misrepresentation, (2) concealment, and (3) unjust enrichment. It alleged
    Bello had misrepresented that he would pay for Ehren’s services, and
    concealed that he had paid Ehren using funds improperly diverted from
    Walldesign’s creditors in a secret account.
    A few weeks before trial, Bello filed a motion in limine to dismiss the
    action on the ground that the bankruptcy court had original and exclusive
    jurisdiction of such disputes. He argued that Ehren’s claims were barred
    under section 544(b), which affords the bankruptcy trustee the exclusive right
    to pursue actions to avoid fraudulent transfers. The trial court denied the
    motion.
    The matter proceeded to jury trial in August 2021. The jury found in
    favor of Ehren on each of its three causes of action. It awarded Ehren
    $320,482 in damages on the concealment claim. Judgment was entered on
    September 3, 2021. This appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    In this appeal, Bello challenges the denial of his motion in limine and
    judgment following the jury verdict on the ground that the trial court lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction to hear the case. Before turning to the merits of
    this argument, however, we address Ehren’s preliminary response that the
    motion in limine was procedurally improper.
    5Ehren also sued Bello’s son, but those claims were subsequently
    dismissed.
    4
    I. Motion in Limine for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction
    Ehren contends that Bello’s motion in limine was procedurally
    improper because such motions should only be used to exclude evidence that
    could be objected to at trial. As a preliminary matter, it is unclear whether
    Ehren forfeited this objection by failing to raise it in the trial court below.
    (See Mangano v. Verity, Inc. (2009) 
    179 Cal.App.4th 217
    , 221 [defendant
    forfeited claim on motion in limine ruling for failure to oppose].) The record
    on appeal does not include a written opposition or a transcript of the court
    proceedings on the motion.
    Even if Ehren preserved this argument, we do not find it persuasive.
    We agree that motions in limine “are designed to facilitate the management
    of a case, generally by deciding difficult evidentiary issues in advance of
    trial.” (Amtower v. Photon Dynamics, Inc. (2008) 
    158 Cal.App.4th 1582
    ,
    1593.) A motion in limine, however, can also function as “an objection to any
    and all evidence” on the grounds that the pleadings “were fatally defective
    and had failed to state a cause of action.” (Edwards v. Centex Real Estate
    Corp. (1997) 
    53 Cal.App.4th 15
    , 27.) In these circumstances, the motion can
    operate as a general demurrer or motion on the pleadings. (Ibid.)
    Entertaining such a “nontraditional” motion in limine, as the trial court did
    here, falls within the court’s “inherent equity, supervisory and administrative
    powers, as well as inherent power to control litigation and conserve judicial
    resources.” (Amtower, at p. 1593; Lucas v. County of Los Angeles (1996)
    
    47 Cal.App.4th 277
    , 284.) We have, however, cautioned trial courts “to be
    wary when choosing to decide an in limine motion that, no matter how
    captioned, functions as a nonstatutory motion for judgment on the pleadings,
    particularly when the motion is filed on the eve of trial” because under
    5
    certain circumstances, it can be “a recipe for reversal.” (Tung v. Chicago Title
    Co. (2021) 
    63 Cal.App.5th 734
    , 740.)
    We are not persuaded that the trial court’s consideration of Bello’s
    motion constituted an abuse of discretion here. Ehren relies on McMillin
    Companies, LLC v. American Safety Indemnity (2015) 
    233 Cal.App.4th 518
    ,
    which reversed an order granting motions in limine to preclude certain
    evidence and argument because in so doing, the trial court essentially
    granted summary adjudication on an element of plaintiff’s claim and nonsuit
    on the issue of damages, without requiring the statutory procedural
    protections associated with summary judgment and nonsuit proceedings. (Id.
    at pp. 553, 541.) Applying these summary judgment and nonsuit standards,
    McMillin concluded that the trial court had erred in granting the motions
    and precluding the parties from trying and proving their respective case and
    defense. (Ibid.) Here, unlike McMillin, Ehren offers no argument or
    authority that the consideration of Bello’s motion led to a prejudicial
    deprivation of procedural protections or standards. We see no basis for such
    an assertion, particularly given that “[t]he lack of subject matter jurisdiction
    cannot be waived and may be raised at any time, even for the first time on
    appeal.” (Alliance for California Business v. State Air Resources Bd. (2018)
    
    23 Cal.App.5th 1050
    , 1060.)
    II. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
    We now turn to the merits of Bello’s argument that the trial court erred
    in denying his motion in limine and entering judgment because it lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction to hear the case. We ordinarily review a motion in
    limine ruling for abuse of discretion, but when the motion “strays beyond its
    traditional confines and results in the entire elimination of a cause of action
    6
    or a defense, we treat it as a demurrer to the evidence and review the motion
    de novo[.]” (County of Glenn v. Foley (2012) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 393
    , 398.)
    “The jurisdiction of the bankruptcy courts, like that of other federal
    courts, is grounded in, and limited by, statute.” (Celotex Corp. v. Edwards
    (1995) 
    514 U.S. 300
    , 307.) Title 28 of the United States Code section 1334(a)
    provides that “the district courts shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction
    of all cases under title 11.” District courts also have original but not
    exclusive jurisdiction of “all civil proceedings arising under title 11, or arising
    in or related to cases under title 11.” (
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b).) “The district
    courts may, in turn, refer ‘any or all proceedings arising under title 11 or
    arising in or related to a case under title 11 . . . to the bankruptcy judges for
    the district.” (Celotex, at p. 308, quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (a).)
    Here, Bello argues that the claims raised by Ehren in the state court
    action fall under the original and exclusive jurisdiction of the district and
    bankruptcy courts pursuant to the provisions of sections 544(b) and 550(a).
    We address each section in turn.
    A. Section 544(b)
    Section 544(b) permits the trustee in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy
    proceeding to recover fraudulent conveyances in order to restore that
    property to the debtor’s estate. (In re Agricultural Research and Technology
    Group, Inc. (9th Cir. 1990) 
    916 F.2d 528
    .) It states that the trustee may
    “avoid” any such transfer “that is voidable under applicable law by a creditor
    holding an unsecured claim . . . .” (§ 544(b)(1).) In other words, section
    544(b) “allows the bankruptcy trustee to step into the shoes of a creditor for
    the purpose of asserting causes of action under state fraudulent conveyance
    acts for the benefit of all creditors[.]” (In re Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (Bankr.
    N.D.Cal. 2002) 
    281 B.R. 1
    , 14.) Moreover, because a fraudulent conveyance
    7
    claim to recover assets of the bankrupt belongs to the estate, the trustee has
    exclusive standing to bring such claims and “divests all creditors of the power
    to bring the claim.” (Ahcom, Ltd. v. Smeding (2010) 
    623 F.3d 1248
    , 1250.)
    Courts have explained that the equitable distribution of a bankruptcy estate
    is dependent upon this principle: “[a]ny other result would produce near
    anarchy where the only discernible organizing principle would be first-come-
    first-served.” (In re Pacific Gas & Electric Co., at p. 14, italics omitted.)
    Bello argues that the bankruptcy trustee’s authority to pursue
    avoidance actions under section 544(b) precludes Ehren’s state court claims.
    That argument, however, incorrectly assumes that Ehren is a creditor of
    Walldesign (or its estate). Here, Ehren alleged that it had an agreement with
    Bello himself—not Walldesign—to provide services to Bello’s family winery.
    Bello offers no evidence that Walldesign had any obligation to pay for these
    services. Indeed, the bankruptcy court rejected a creditor claim by another
    entity in Ehren’s position. (In re Walldesign, Inc. (Bankr. 9th Cir. Aug. 2,
    2018, No. CC-17-1290) 2018 Bankr. Lexis 2283.) Like Ehren, wine barrel
    company Francois Freres was paid by Bello for barrels used at the family
    vineyard with a check from Walldesign’s account. (Id. at p. *2.) After the
    bankruptcy court entered judgment against Freres to recover the fraudulent
    transfer, Freres filed a general unsecured claim against Walldesign for the
    same amount. (Id. at p. *3.) In re Walldesign, Inc. determined that Freres’
    creditor claim was unenforceable because Freres had provided nothing of
    value to Walldesign in exchange for the payment: “Simply put, the French
    oak barrels went to [Bello Family Vineyards], not [Walldesign], and thus
    there was no underlying debt.” (Id. at pp. *10, *13.) Nor had Freres provided
    any value to the bankruptcy estate, as it was returning fraudulently
    transferred monies over which it had no claim. (Ibid.) So too here.
    8
    The section 544(b) authorities cited by Bello are thus inapposite
    because, unlike this case, each involved creditors of the debtor or the debtor’s
    estate. In re Tessmer (Bankr. M.D.Ga. 2005) 
    329 B.R. 776
     (Tessmer) involved
    a debtor who had killed her husband and, after being convicted of murder,
    transferred a property interest to her parents. (Id. at p. 778.) The victim’s
    mother filed a wrongful death action against the debtor in state court. (Ibid.)
    The debtor subsequently filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and shortly
    thereafter, her mother-in-law filed a fraudulent conveyance action against
    the debtor’s parents. (Ibid.) Tessmer concluded that because the mother-in-
    law was a creditor based on her pending action against the debtor’s parents,
    her action was barred under section 544(b) as an attempt to circumvent the
    bankruptcy proceedings and infringe on the trustee’s exclusive right to
    pursue avoidance actions. (Tessmer, at pp. 779–780.)
    Similarly, in Sears Petroleum & Transportation Corp. v. Burgess
    Construction Services (D. Mass. 2006) 
    417 F.Supp.2d 212
     (Sears), Sears filed
    an action against Burgess Construction and Gregory Burgess after they had
    failed to pay a $562,912.35 judgment against them, seeking to recover
    allegedly fraudulent conveyances of Burgess Construction funds made by
    Burgess to his wife Anne. (Id. at pp. 214–215.) Burgess Construction
    subsequently filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. (Ibid.) The district court
    concluded that Sears, a creditor, could not maintain the same fraudulent
    transfer claims as the trustee under section 544(b). (Sears, at p. 221.) It
    reasoned that if Sears prevailed on its claims, it would be recovering money
    that rightfully belonged to the estate and would constitute an impermissible
    “ ‘end-run’ around the proper bankruptcy channels.” (Id. at p. 222.)
    9
    Here, unlike Tessmer and Sears, there is nothing to suggest that Ehren
    is a creditor of Walldesign or its estate. Section 544(b) does not preclude a
    non-creditor like Ehren from pursuing its state court claims against Bello.
    B. Section 550(a)
    Section 550 “dictates who must reimburse the trustee and, through the
    trustee, the debtor’s creditors, for those fraudulent and ‘avoided’ transfers.”
    (Walldesign, Inc., supra, 872 F.3d at p. 960.) Section 550(a) provides that a
    trustee may recover a transfer avoided under section 554 from an “initial
    transferee.” The Bankruptcy Code “draws a critical distinction between
    initial and subsequent transferees when it comes to the recovery of
    fraudulent transfers.” (Walldesign, Inc., at pp. 961–962.) Initial transferees
    are “strictly liable” to the trustee for such transfers. (Id. at p. 959.)
    Subsequent transferees, however, may avail themselves of the “safe-harbor”
    provision of section 550(b)(1), which precludes recovery where a subsequent
    transferee accepted the property “for value,” “in good faith,” and “without
    knowledge of the voidability of the transfer avoided.” (Walldesign, Inc., at
    p. 959.)
    Here, Bello argues that Ehren’s status as an “initial transferee”
    precludes its state court action. His preliminary contention that Ehren is an
    “initial transferee” under section 550(a) is uncontroverted. In Walldesign,
    Inc., supra, 872 F.3d at pages 961–962, other entities in Ehren’s position
    were determined to be “initial transferees” of fraudulent transfers from
    Walldesign’s secondary account. For example, interior design firm owner
    Lisa Henry was paid by Bello for design services on a building he owned with
    checks from that Walldesign account. (Id. at p. 961.) Similarly, the Bureshes
    sold property to another Bello-controlled entity (RU Investments) but
    received checks from Walldesign’s secondary account. (Ibid.) The Committee
    10
    filed adversary proceedings to recover these payments. (Ibid.) Walldesign,
    Inc. concluded that the Bureshes and Henry qualified as “initial transferees”
    because each transfer “was a classic ‘one-step transaction’—with funds
    moving from Walldesign (the transferor) to the Bureshes and Ms. Henry (the
    initial transferees), on behalf of Bello (the party for whose benefit the
    transfers were made).” (Id. at p. 967.) It concluded that this outcome was
    fair and consistent with the policy concerns underlying section 550, as the
    Bureshes and Henry received checks bearing the name “WALLDESIGN
    INCORPORATED,” “providing at least some indication of an irregularity in
    the payments.” (Walldesign, Inc., at p. 968.) The same is true here, as Ehren
    was paid with Walldesign funds and each check bore the name
    “WALLDESIGN INCORPORATED.”
    We disagree, however, with Bello’s ultimate assertion that Ehren’s
    status as an initial transferee means that it was a creditor. An initial
    transferee can be a creditor of the debtor or bankruptcy estate. Pursuant to
    section 502(h), a transferee may make a claim against the bankruptcy estate
    after the recovery of property under section 550. But Bello provides no
    authority to support his underlying assumption that an initial transferee
    must be a creditor. As explained above, there is no basis to conclude that
    Ehren is a creditor of Walldesign or the estate. There is nothing to show that
    Walldesign owed any debt to Ehren. Walldesign’s estate obtained a judgment
    requiring Ehren to return fraudulently transferred monies over which it had
    no claim. (In re Walldesign, Inc., supra, 2018 Bankr. Lexis 2283 at p. *13.)
    Because Ehren was not a creditor of Walldesign, neither section 544(b) nor
    section 550(a) precluded Ehren from pursuing its state court claims against
    Bello.
    11
    In sum, we conclude that the trial court did not err in denying Bello’s
    motion in limine and reject Bello’s challenge to the judgment and entry of
    judgment for the same reasons.
    DISPOSITION
    The September 3, 2021 judgment is affirmed. Ehren is entitled to its
    costs on appeal.
    12
    _________________________
    Mayfield, J.*
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Richman, Acting P.J.
    _________________________
    Miller, J.
    Ehren Jordan Wine Cellars, LLC v. Bello et al. (A163720)
    * Judge of the Mendocino Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A163720

Filed Date: 9/19/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/19/2022